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Operating Systems Solaris Explain @(#)cshrc 1.11 89/11/29 SMI Post 302843515 by Don Cragun on Tuesday 13th of August 2013 02:54:46 PM
Old 08-13-2013
It looks like bartus11 has mostly answered your question. It is an sccs (Source Code Control System) ID comment. In this case it says that this script is version 1.11 and was last updated on November 29, 1989. The SMI is for Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Once upon a time, every file that was part of a Solaris system distribution that had a place where a comment could be included contained a line like this. Binary files also contained data like this. You can use the what utility to extract this information from any file that contained the @(#) sccs ID introducer.
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which(1)							   User Commands							  which(1)

NAME
which - locate a command; display its pathname or alias SYNOPSIS
which [filename...] DESCRIPTION
which takes a list of names and looks for the files which would be executed had these names been given as commands. Each argument is expanded if it is aliased, and searched for along the user's path. Both aliases and path are taken from the user's .cshrc file. FILES
~/.cshrc source of aliases and path values /usr/bin/which ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
csh(1), attributes(5) DIAGNOSTICS
A diagnostic is given for names which are aliased to more than a single word, or if an executable file with the argument name was not found in the path. NOTES
which is not a shell built-in command; it is the UNIX command, /usr/bin/which BUGS
Only aliases and paths from ~/.cshrc are used; importing from the current environment is not attempted. Must be executed by csh(1), since only csh knows about aliases. To compensate for ~/.cshrc files in which aliases depend upon the prompt variable being set, which sets this variable to NULL. If the ~/.cshrc produces output or prompts for input when prompt is set, which may produce some strange results. SunOS 5.10 26 Sep 1992 which(1)
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